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The Floor is an American game show based on the Dutch game show of the same name.The series is hosted by Rob Lowe and premiered on January 2, 2024, on Fox. [1] Standing in separate squares of a floor grid, contestants with expertise in a variety of trivia subjects challenge each other in head-to-head duels, with the winner of each duel taking over all territory controlled by the loser.
Each contestant is assigned a different topic. One contestant is chosen at random and shown the topics for all adjacent opponents. The contestant chooses one opponent to play against, and the two step out of the grid to participate in a duel. The contestants are given separate 45-second clocks, with only one running at any given time.
The contestant is shown a target price and six grocery items, four of which are priced below the target price. One at a time, the contestant selects items they believe are priced lower than the target. The contestant's winnings start at $1 and are multiplied by ten for each correct selection, to $10, $100 and $1,000.
During "One Bid" rounds, contestants can't guess the same price as another contestant. For example, if someone guesses that an item costs $600, the next contestant could guess $599 or $601, but ...
Contestants answer questions to win counters, then choose a drop zone and press their buzzer to release one counter at a time into that zone. The goal is to have the counters land flat on the upper shelf so that its retraction will cause them to push other counters over its front edge, leading them in turn to push still others off the lower ...
A second miss results in the question being discarded. Contestants may buzz-in at any time, but must answer based only on whatever information the host has read to that point. After the 12 questions have been asked, the contestants' positions are reversed and the host asks a second set of 12 questions worth £2,000 each.
The single day record for shows in daytime television was set in 1984 by Michael Larson, who won $110,237 (equivalent to $323,000 in 2023) [3] on Press Your Luck. Larson achieved this record by memorizing the show's board patterns, repeatedly hitting the board's squares that awarded contestants money and an additional spin, which would, in turn, replace the spin he had just used, effectively ...
Sean and Catherine are only one of six couples to get married from "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" franchises in 36 seasons combined. "It's easy to see why people break up," Catherine admitted.